Archive for April, 2005

Kevin Driscoll on Jimbo Wales

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A quite wonderful student in our Internet & Society ‘05 class (and
a teacher of mathematics and computing in his own right), Kevin
Driscoll, writes about hearing new Berkman Fellow Jimbo Wales the other night here on campus.  Among other fine observations, Kevin writes:

“While Wikipedia passed up tremendous sums by foregoing advertising,
the financial future looks bright. As Wikipedia leaves its adolescence
and receives 501.3c non-profit status, donations are more reliable than
ever. Wales told of a three-week, $75000(US) fundraising drive cut
short after $95000(US) was collected in only two! Yahoo recently
donated a data center to create homebase for Asian wiki initiatives.
The next step for Wikipedia is NGO-status which, according to Wales,
requires a more traditionally bureaucratic infrastructure in order that
it may “interface” better with other large-scale international
organizations.

‘Perversely, pathologically optimistic,’ (and still afraid of kicking
out the Klingons) Jimbo Wales is demonstrating the enabling, democratic
promises of the Web with every ambitious new project.”

Internet Law Colloquium on A2K and Scholarly Communications

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ILC 2004-5
tonight is led by Mike Carroll, a law prof at Villanova who has been at
the leading edge of the Access to Knowledge (A2K) movement.

Mike says that this issue is as simple as “giving life to the earliest
hopes and dreams of what the Internet can be.”  While eBooks
haven’t been a big deal, there has been an explosion in the
blogosphere, Mike argues, that is part of the realization of this
vision.   Copyright, at this point, may well be standing the way of the progress of science, Mike says.

He wonders: could we just take apart the functions of a publisher –
Registration, Certification, Awareness, Archiving — and put them back
together, more optimally, in the digital space?

It’s a fun and special group in the room tonight for our second-to-last
class of the year.  In addition to Mike, Doc Searls and David
Johnson
have kindly stuck around from the Gruter-Berkman event earlier
today and have come upstairs to class.  (I suspect they may be
planning their escape as I type, but I’m glad they stumbled in all the
same.)

Mike’s telling us about OpenAccessLaw.org, that he’s doing with Dan Hunter, which is awfully cool.

Doc, it turns out, was learning out loud.

TheFacebook’s madcap growth, and place on campus

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TheFacebook.com now has 2.4 MM users, says the Boston Globe
Note the BU Dean who is a member.  I’ve often wondered whether it
is a good idea for a faculty member or administrator to join; I have
mixed feelings, honestly.

Trust, Identity, Neuroscience, and other good things

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We are hosting an all-day Workshop today, “From Personal to Impersonal
Trusted Exchange in the Physical and Digital Domains,” to which you can
listen in if you
like.  The Berkman Center for Internet & Society and the
Gruter Institute are jointly hosting this event on how digital
technologies may provide new ways for scaling governance and fostering
trust and reciprocity (for example, in “community commerce” platforms
like eBay and Amazon).

Among the participants are: Doc Searls
(Digital
Identity), Editor, Linux Journal (famous blogger who introduced himself
as a “student of Clippinger’s!); Reed Hundt, (Governance), Former
Chairman FCC, Senior Advisor, McKinsey and Company; Allison Koch
(Reputation Systems) formerly of eBay; Charles Firestone (Leadership),
Executive Director of the Aspen Institute Communications and Society
Program;  John H. Clippinger, (Trust and Edge Organization)
Berkman Center; David Lazar (Digital Government), Kennedy School of
Government; and, not least, our own Jonathan Zittrain (Digital
Institutions). 

Today’s session is the culmination of a yearlong
series of workshops exploring the intersection of neuroscience, law and
economics and what we can learn about emerging digital
institutions.  Pretty geeky, but super-interesting.  Join the
stream!

Tech note: we are trying Icecast for the first time today.  We’d
welcome feedback on whether the stream is easy to hear or not.  It
seems better to us than what we’ve used in the past.

Distribution and copyright

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S. 167 has made it to the President’s desk.  Susan Crawford asks, “What’s distribution?”  Derek Slater has more links.  See also Pam Samuelson’s class blog.

The bill, via Thomas, is here
Among other important provisions: “(Sec. 103) Establishes criminal
penalties for willful copyright infringement by the distribution of a
computer program, musical work, motion picture or other audiovisual
work, or sound recording being prepared for commercial distribution by
making it available on a computer network accessible to members of the
public, if the person knew or should have known that the work was
intended for commercial distribution.”

S. 167 also includes The Preservation of Orphan Works Act and other previously pending legislation.

Newest Berkman fellow: Jimbo Wales

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We are extremely pleased to have our newest Berkman fellow, Wikipedia
founder and community leader Jimmy (”Jimbo”) Wales, here with us this week in
Cambridge.  His legacy in the Internet & Society space is
already assured.  We’re looking forward to learning much more
about what’s behind the Wikipedia and Wikipedia News phenomena. 
Join us tonight at 8:30 p.m. at Pound Hall, room 101, on the HLS campus
for a public lecture by Jimbo.

Jimbo tells us that Wikipedia has just surpassed not only Expedia, Geocities, and other big sites — but also the New York Times in terms of daily page views.

WAYS TO BE HERE IF YOU ARE NOT HERE: There’s a webcast of the lunch going on right now and, I suspect, an
IRC going (SJ is right in front of me with an IRC client open, it
appears…).  J has directions and more.  There’s also a transcript of the IRC session for Wales’s talk in JZ’s class last night.

What’s new in ICT4D?

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This Tuesday’s class
in Internet & Society ‘05 is where we turn our attentions from a
largely US- (and occasionally EU-, thanks to my co-teacher Urs Gasser,
an expert in this regard) focused review of Internet law and society
issues to the particular concerns of developing countries in our space.

As I’m preparing to teach this class and reviewing what others more
knowledgable than me are saying, I’m struck by how little, it seems to
me, the issues have changed over the past three years that I’ve been
paying somewhat close attention to this topic.  I am no doubt
wrong, in fact hope I’m very wrong — surely many of the very
hard-working people focused on ICT for development have made loads of
progress during that intervening period and perhaps think that the
issues are quite different today than they were.  No doubt access
and connectivity have continued to move forward in some developing
countries contexts.  There are certainly exciting things happening
in terms of more voices
being heard across the world, though still far too few, that are
amplified by new ICT-related tools (check out the brand new Tanzania index of bridge-bloggers). 
There are promising new
avenues that good people like Michael Best, Ethan Zuckerman, Colin
Maclay, Geoffrey Kirkman, Charlie Nesson, and other colleagues of ours
continue to pursue.  And no doubt there are regional variations,
with more progress is some parts of the world than in others, for all
manner of reasons.

But the hard problems involved in ICT4D strike me — as an outsider to the
field, in truth — as not all that different from the hard problems of
several years ago.  Others would frame them more clearly than I
can, but here are a handful that seem plain, and persistent: 1) Attention:
not that many people are talking about or covering development of ICTs
in developing countries, whether in those countries (and focused on
other things) or outside (markets not big enough, other issues to
tackle with aid dollars, etc.) (cf. Ethan Z and Global Voices). 
Those who do pay attention are often mired in very long-term processes
like WSIS; 2) Prioritization:
the trade-offs in terms of ICTs v. other costly issues, like health and
education and other basic human services, tends not to break in favor
of ICTs (perhaps for good reason, perhaps not); 3) Money:
funding for infrastructure is in short supply, whether through
international aid, private sector investment, or national investment,
in most areas; 4) More money:
successful pilot projects prove the point that things can go amazingly
well with a little talent and a good ICT idea (see Ethan’s pointer to a project in Mali, e.g.), but without major follow-on funding, many of these promising starts remain pilot-sized; 5) Monopolies:
the telecomms/all-IP future problem still persists in most countries,
with uncertain legal and market dymanics in play that may make
transitions to cheaper, more universally accessible means of
communication a long and slow process.  That’s just for starters,
of course.

Have the hard problems in ICT4D actually changed much in the past few years?

David Hornik of August Capital on the “Startup Ecosystem”

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What sets the Bay Area (and Austin and Boston etc.) apart
from other places you might choose to start-up your next
business?  Lawyers, of course, are part of the answer, as are
boondoggles.

Blogodemia in the Village Voice

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They’ve got a jaunty little article and a list
of academic blogs.  Our affiliate Wayne Marshall and faculty member Lawrence Lessig and good friends Jay Rosen and Siva are all in there.

Explore digital privacy with JOLT

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The Harvard Journal of Law Technology’s symposium each year is a terrific free event.  This year’s version, on privacy, is April 21 - 22.

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